We Have Seen This Movie Before
A pre-WWII cartoon by Dr. Seuse called out the Nazis in America |
The liberal class, terrified by the rise of neo-fascism and demagogues
such as Donald Trump, have thrown in their lot with discredited and reviled
establishment politicians who slavishly do the bidding of the war industry,
oligarchs, and corporations.
The bankruptcy of the liberal class means that those who decry the folly of permanent war and NATO expansion, mercenary trade deals, exploitation of workers by globalization, austerity and neoliberalism come increasingly from the far-right.
This right-wing rage, dressed up in
the United States as Christian fascism, has already made huge gains in Hungary, Poland, Sweden, Italy, Bulgaria and France and
may take power in
the Czech Republic, where inflation and rising energy costs
have seen the number of Czechs falling below the
poverty line double.
By next spring, following a punishing winter of rolling blackouts and months when families struggle to pay for food and heat, what is left of our anemic western democracy could be largely extinguished.
Extremism is the political cost of pronounced social inequality and political stagnation. Demagogues, who promise moral and economic renewal, vengeance against phantom enemies and a return to lost glory, rise out of the morass. Hatred and violence, already at the boiling point, are legitimized. A reviled ruling class, and the supposed civility and democratic norms it espouses, are ridiculed.
Bund Sisters |
See my interview
with Stephen Kinzer about the post-war activities of the CIA, including its
recruitment of Nazi and Japanese war criminals and its creation of black sites
where former Nazis were hired to interrogate, torture and murder suspected
leftists, labor leaders and communists, detailed in
his book Poisoner
in Chief: Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control, here.
Fascism, which
has always been with us, is again ascendant. The far-right politician Giorgia Meloni is
expected to become Italy’s first female prime minister after elections on
Sunday. In a coalition with two other far-right parties, Meloni is forecast to
win more than 60 percent of the seats in Parliament, though the left-leaning 5-Star
Movement may put a dent in those expectations.
Meloni got her start in politics as a 15-year-old activist for the youth wing of the Italian Social Movement, founded after World War II by supporters of Benito Mussolini. She calls EU bureaucrats agents of “nihilistic global elites driven by international finance.”
She peddles the “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory that non-white immigrants are being permitted to enter Western nations as part of a plot to undermine or “replace” the political power and culture of white people. She has called on the Italian navy to turn back boats with immigrants, which the far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini did in 2018.
Her Fratelli d’Italia, Brothers of Italy, party is a close ally of
Hungary’s President, Viktor Orban. A European Parliament resolution recently declared that
Hungary can no longer be defined as a democracy.
Meloni and Orban are not alone. Sweden Democrats, which took over 20 percent of the vote in Sweden’s general election last week to become the country’s second-largest political party, was formed in 1988 from a neo-Nazi group called B.S.S., or Keep Sweden Swedish.
It has deep fascist roots. Of the party’s 30 founders, 18 had Nazi affiliations, including several who served in the Waffen SS, according to Tony Gustaffson a historian and former Sweden Democrat member.
France’s Marine Le Pen took over 41 percent of the vote in April against Emmanuel Macron. In Spain, the hard-right Vox party is the third largest party in Spain’s Parliament. The far-right German AfD or Alternative for Germany party took over 12 percent in federal elections in 2017, making it the third largest party, though it lost a couple percentage points in the 2021 elections.
The U.S. has its own version of fascism embodied in a Republican party that coalesces in cult-like fashion around Donald Trump, embraces the magical thinking, misogyny, homophobia and white supremacy of the Christian Right and actively subverts the election process.
Economic collapse was indispensable to the Nazis’ rise to power. In the 1928 elections in Germany, the Nazi party received less than 3 percent of the vote. Then came the global financial crash of 1929. By early 1932, 40 percent of the German insured workforce, six million people, were unemployed.
That same year, the Nazis became the largest political party in the German parliament. The Weimar government, tone deaf and hostage to the big industrialists, prioritized paying bank loans and austerity rather than feeding and employing a desperate population. It foolishly imposed severe restrictions on who was eligible for unemployment insurance.
Millions of Germans went hungry. Desperation and rage
rippled through the population. Mass rallies, led by a collection of buffoonish
Nazis in brown uniforms who would have felt at home at Mar-a-Lago, denounced
Jews, Communists, intellectuals, artists and the ruling class, as internal
enemies. Hate was their main currency. It sold well.
The evisceration of democratic procedures and institutions, however, preceded the Nazis’ ascension to power in 1933. The Reichstag, the German Parliament, was as dysfunctional as the U.S. Congress. The Socialist leader Friedrich Ebert, president from 1919 until 1925, and later Heinrich BrĂ¼ning, chancellor from 1930 to 1932, relied on Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution to largely rule by decree to bypass the fractious Parliament.
Article 48, which granted the president the right in an
emergency to issue decrees, was “a trapdoor through which Germany could fall
into dictatorship,” historian Benjamin Carter
Hett writes.
Article 48 was
the Weimar equivalent of the executive orders liberally used by Barack Obama,
Donald Trump and Joe Biden, to bypass our own legislative impasses. As in 1930s
Germany, our courts — especially the Supreme Court — have been seized by
extremists. The press has bifurcated into antagonistic tribes where lies
and truth are indistinguishable, and opposing sides are demonized. There is
little dialogue or compromise, the twin pillars of a democratic system.
The two ruling
parties slavishly serve the dictates of the war industry, global corporations
and the oligarchy, to which it has given huge tax cuts. It has established the
most pervasive and intrusive system of government surveillance in human
history. It runs the largest prison system in the world. It has militarized the
police.
Democrats are as culpable as Republicans. The Obama administration interpreted the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force as giving the executive branch the right to erase due process and act as judge, jury and executioner in assassinating U.S. citizens, starting with radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.
Two weeks later, a U.S. drone strike killed Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, Anwar’s 16-year-old son, who was never linked to terrorism, along with 9 other teenagers at a cafe in Yemen. It was the Obama administration that signed into law Section 1021 of the National Defense Authorization Act, overturning the 1878 Posse Comitatus Act, which prohibits the use of the military as a domestic police force.
It was the Obama administration that bailed out Wall Street and
abandoned Wall Street’s victims. It was the Obama administration that repeatedly used the Espionage Act to
criminalize those, such as Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden, who exposed
government lies, crimes, and fraud. And it was the Obama administration that
massively expanded the
use of militarized drones.
The Nazis responded to the February 1933 burning of the Reichstag, which they likely staged, by employing Article 48 to push through the Decree for the Protection of the People and the State. The fascists instantly snuffed out the pretense of Weimar democracy.
They legalized imprisonment
without trial for anyone considered a national security threat. They abolished
independent labor unions, freedom of speech, freedom of association and freedom
of the press, along with the privacy of postal and telephone communications.
The step from dysfunctional democracy to full-blown fascism was, and will again be, a small one. The hatred for the ruling class, embodied by the establishment Republican and Democratic parties, which have merged into one ruling party, is nearly universal.
The public, battling inflation that is at a 40-year high and cost the average U.S. household an additional $717 a month in July alone, will increasingly see any political figure or political party willing to attack the traditional ruling elites as an ally.
The more
crude, irrational or vulgar the attack, the more the disenfranchised rejoice.
These sentiments are true here and in Europe, where energy costs are expected
to rise by as much as 80 percent this winter and an inflation rate of 10
percent is eating away at incomes.
The
reconfiguration of society under neoliberalism to exclusively benefit the
billionaire class, the slashing and privatization of public services, including
schools, hospitals and utilities, along with deindustrialization, the
profligate pouring of state funds and resources into the war industry, at the
expense of the nation’s infrastructure and social services, and the building of
the world’s largest prison system and militarization of police, have
predictable results.
At the heart of the problem is a loss of faith in traditional forms of government and democratic solutions. Fascism in the 1930s succeeded, as Peter Drucker observed, not because people believed its conspiracy theories and lies but in spite of the fact that they saw through them.
Fascism thrived in the face of “a
hostile press, a hostile radio, a hostile cinema, a hostile church, and a
hostile government which untiringly pointed out the Nazi lies, the Nazi
inconsistency, the unattainability of their promises, and the dangers and folly
of their course.” He added, “nobody would have been a Nazi if rational belief
in the Nazi promises had been a prerequisite.”
As in the past,
these new fascist parties cater to emotional yearnings. They give vent to
feelings of abandonment, worthlessness, despair, and alienation. They promise
unattainable miracles. They too peddle bizarre conspiracy theories including
QAnon. But most of all, they promise vengeance against a ruling class that
betrayed the nation.
Hett defines the
Nazis as “a nationalist protest movement against globalization.” The rise of
the new fascism has its roots in a similar exploitation by global corporations
and oligarchs. More than anything else, people want to regain control over
their lives, if only to punish those blamed and scapegoated for their
misery.
We have seen
this movie before.
Copyright
Robert Scheer, 2020.